Hi!
On Fri, Dec 1, 2017 at 4:36 AM, "Christoph Schäfer"
<christoph-schaefer@gmx.de> wrote:
Hi all,
I have some incredible news for you.
Yesterday freieFarbe/freeColour received a message from the German industrial standards
organisation (DIN) that our proposal for an open standard for "Open Colour Communication" based
on the HLC colour model (aka as Lhc) has been accepted and will become a German national standard
soon (because we have prepared this carefully during 2016 and 2017).
This (and all you say below) is indeed awesome news!
Please keep us updated to how the adventure goes forward, at the
various steps. :-)
What does this mean? First, it will no longer be an initiative by a tiny non-profit organisation,
but a national standard, and since DIN is very influential internationally, it will become a
de-facto standard in other countries as well. Plus, it may be possible to make this an ISO
standard via DIN.
In addition, DIN will support the formulation of the standard and our work with substantial sums,
not the least because the creation of a standard and pushing its way through all the respective
instances and expert checks is expensive (would've been 25,000 EUR in our case, which has been
reduced to zero, because it's an open and non-commercial project). We will also receive some
money for meetings, travel expenses etc. from DIN.
One of the reasons we got so far is support by parts of the printing industry in Germany and
Switzerland. The prototype of the printed colour reference, which we presented to DIN, was only
possible thanks to a donation of inks by an international manufacturer of digitial printing
machines. We're currently cooperating with ink manufacturers in Germany and Switzerland to
establish ink formulas for HLC colours that cannot be reproduced in CMYK, aka as spot colours, so
printing companies can actually order spot colour inks by just inserting the HLC colour code in
their order forms.
The printed colour reference has the form a ring binder. Colours are sorted by their H-values
(H=Hue) in steps of ten. Luminacity (L) uses steps of five, and chroma (C) also steps of ten. We
plan to refine this later to also present the H-values in steps of five.
This is a real colour system and not just a colour collection like Pantone or RAL. Most
importantly, it is a free and open alternative to Pantone & co, which is not only better, but
also supported by a national standards organisation and some major players in the industry. There
are no licensing costs to pay for anyone who wants to use the colour system, not for software
producers and neither for the ink mixing formulas. The latter is important, because vendors like
Pantone ask for a lot of money from ink producers for the mixing formulas, whilst the open HLC
system is gratis.
The PDF version of the colour reference and the digital colour palettes will be published under a
CC licence (CC BY-ND 4.0). The printed colour reference will cost some money to cover the
production costs, but it will be much cheaper than the ones from Pantone & co, because we only
need to cover our expenses and do not intend/aren't allowed to as a non-profit organisation to
commercialise it. Moreover, everyone else will be free to print their own references, and there
are no trademarks involved.
Another important aspect is that the HLC colour system, being a national standard, will be very
hard to attack legally by commercial vendors like Pantone or RAL, who are known to play hardball
when it comes to competition. They would have to take on DIN, which I'm sure they'll think about
twice.
We'll start with Germany and Switzerland, because that's where most of our members and supporters
are from, but we plan to release an English version of the colour reference as soon as the colour
system has been formally adapted as a standard.
Our (also very small) non-profit entity in France, LILA, will be
interested to push the system forward in France printing industry as
well.
Not sure what we could do though since printing is not our specialty
(though we do print stuff regularly) and we don't have many contacts
in printing industry as you do.
But well, if ever you plan on moving the standards into France, we'll
help what we can. :-)
Currently, an older version of the HLC palette is already included in Scribus 1.5.3+ (L*a*b*) and
the latest LibreOffice (sRGB). And speaking of Scribus, the juicy bit is that the colour
reference will most likely be produced with Scribus 1.5.4svn, because it offers the highest
colour precision for fill colours (64 bit). No other DTP software comes close in this regard.
Nice.
Jehan
Christoph
_______________________________________________
CREATE mailing list
CREATE@lists.freedesktop.org
https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/create
--
ZeMarmot open animation film
http://film.zemarmot.net
Patreon: https://patreon.com/zemarmot
Tipeee: https://www.tipeee.com/zemarmot
Context
Privacy Policy |
Impressum (Legal Info) |
Copyright information: Unless otherwise specified, all text and images
on this website are licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.
This does not include the source code of LibreOffice, which is
licensed under the Mozilla Public License (
MPLv2).
"LibreOffice" and "The Document Foundation" are
registered trademarks of their corresponding registered owners or are
in actual use as trademarks in one or more countries. Their respective
logos and icons are also subject to international copyright laws. Use
thereof is explained in our
trademark policy.